About the Consortium

EEA
CONFERENCE
www.future-agricultures.org 2007
Policy Making in a Federal Context:
Views from the Regions on the
Future of Agricultures in Ethiopia
Amdissa Teshome & Stephen Devereux
Ethiopian Economic Association
Fifth International Conference on the Ethiopian Economy
Addis Ababa – 7-9 June 2007
EEA
CONFERENCE
www.future-agricultures.org 2007
A typical statement on policy making process in Ethiopia:
“Policy making and implementation in Ethiopia today
are strongly influenced by a long history of centralised,
hierarchical systems of control under Imperial rule and
nearly two decades of military rule by the Derg. …. The
EPRDF has successfully met many of the challenges
but in spite of significant political, administrative and
financial decentralisation, the centralised and
controlling legacy remains an important factor.”
~ Michael Halderman, FAO, 2004
EEA
CONFERENCE
www.future-agricultures.org 2007
OBJECTIVES OF THE REGIONAL
CONSULTATION:
•To develop and test an inclusive model for
policy dialogue
•To generate indicative policy ideas and
trends on the future of agriculture
EEA
CONFERENCE
www.future-agricultures.org 2007
PROCESS
4-step process for Regional Consultations work:
• Step 1: Consult community
• Step 2: Validate/enrich findings at regional workshops
• Step 3: Inform policy makers and the general public
• Step 4: Engage/influence the policy process
These steps are neither mutually exclusive or linear.
EEA
CONFERENCE
www.future-agricultures.org 2007
METHODOLOGY AND COVERAGE
• Qualitative/participatory approach
• Regional sample reflects the national profile. Woreda and community
selection not statistically representative but designed to give indicative
ideas and trends.
• 6 Regions: Tigray, Oromia, Amhara, Benshangul–Gumuz, Afar,
SNNPR. Corresponding 6 regional workshops.
• 22 Woredas: 3–5 per region;
• 77 Focus Group Discussions: 678 participants, cross-section of
community members: “yesterday‟s farmers, today‟s farmers, and future
farmers”.
• Framework: Pathways for agriculture/pastoralism
EEA
CONFERENCE
www.future-agricultures.org 2007
(1) Intensification
• [Policy push: 1960s CADU; 1970s WADU; 1990s PADETES]
• Nonetheless, there is a consensus that intensification is still at its
infancy mainly because rate of adoption is very low
– prices are too high (due to removal of subsidy)
– markets are not sufficiently liberalised
Prospects for intensification:
• There is a need to take intensification seriously.
– Improve access to fertiliser and seeds. (i) Liberalise marketing;
(ii) Reintroduce subsidies? (iii) Set adoption targets
– Identify and promote high–value crops (find more niches like flowers),
but: (i) environmental impact assessments are needed, (ii) investing
back into the rural community is crucial.
EEA
CONFERENCE
www.future-agricultures.org 2007
(2) Diversification (within and outside agriculture)
• [Limited policy attention in the past, but this is changing.]
• There are examples of diversification (within agriculture) in
Amhara, Tigray and Oromiya.
• SNNPR is the most diversified region but not as market
oriented as one would like.
Prospects for diversification:
(i) PASDEP focus is on diversification within agriculture;
(ii) Overall, the speed of diversification is not satisfactory due
to various constraints (technical and institutional).
(ii) More attention is needed to off–farm sources of income
(e.g. trade and marketing, rural non–farm employment).
EEA
CONFERENCE
www.future-agricultures.org 2007
(3) Commercialisation(s)
• [Policy push: 1960s, 2000s]
• Eternal dilemma: Large vs small farm commercialisation?
• The government is convinced it can promote both.
• However, small farmers face numerous constraints to
commercialise [see Future Agricultures parallel session].
• Prospects for commercialisation:
(i) Commercialising smallholders is expensive; no scale economies
(ii) Commercialisation may make land consolidation inevitable.
(ii) Co-operatives offer another route for smallholders.
EEA
CONFERENCE
www.future-agricultures.org 2007
(4) Depopulation (urbanisation, resettlement and migration):
• [Policy push: 1980s, 2000s]
• Easing pressure on highlands and making use of unutilised land
through resettlement
• „Depopulation‟ was not liked as a concept but the end result was
felt inevitable. “We can’t continue citing 85% rural population!”
• SNNPR has most experience in migration, but recently migration
does not pay as much as it used to. Some reverse migration.
• In Tigray the Ethio–Eritrea war stopped cross–border seasonal
migration. Recently the development of small towns in the region
and other areas have created opportunities.
• Prospects for depopulation: Inevitable but also variable among
the regions (see Fig. 1)
EEA
CONFERENCE
www.future-agricultures.org 2007
PATHWAYS FOR PASTORALISM
• Sustaining pastoral livelihoods
• Diversification within and outside pastoralism
• Promoting export trade
• Finding alternative livelihoods (dropping out)
EEA
CONFERENCE
www.future-agricultures.org 2007
100.0
What percent of the population do you expect to
Figure 1: Proportion of the population depend on agriculture/pastoralism 20-25 years
expected to depend on agriculture
from now? now
20–25 years from
90.0
80.0
70.0 64.9 66
60.2 59.2
60.0
58.0 56.5
49.3
%
50.0
40.0
30.0
20.0
10.0
0.0
SNNPR (n=16) Afar (n=12) BGRS (n=17) Amhara (n=23) Oromiya (n=19) Tigray (n=23) Average
(n=110)
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CONFERENCE
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CROSS–CUTTING ISSUES (1)
Education and agriculture
The relationship is rather complex. To mention but a few observations:
• Lack of literacy constrains investment in technology uptake.
• School children and youth have no desire to stay in farming. Children
out of school indicated that they have no option but to stay.
• Today‟s educated generation never went back to agriculture because
“We were told education is a way out of poverty so we escaped!”
• Parents are happy that more children are going to school, but they
reject full-day education (re: demand for children‟s labour).
• In some areas we found school dropouts doing well – diversifying and
well integrated into the market. In others, educated farmers were lacking
ambition – they are satisfied with what they have. Why this difference?
EEA
CONFERENCE
www.future-agricultures.org 2007
CROSS–CUTTING ISSUES (2)
Gender and Agriculture
• Women‟s burden increases with diversification.
• Women empowerment is a major issue in all the
regions, but more so in Afar and Benshangul.
• The importance of girl education is indisputable but
concerns were expressed from mothers and girls
that this has increased women‟s burdens.
EEA
CONFERENCE
www.future-agricultures.org 2007
CROSS–CUTTING ISSUES (3)
Existing Government Programmes & Agriculture
• There is high concentration of efforts on food
insecure areas (history of food aid). Ensuring food
security is desirable and urgent. But we need to
think beyond food security.
• There is also a need to pay equal (if not more)
attention to the “relative food secure” (“high
potential”) areas.
EEA
CONFERENCE
www.future-agricultures.org 2007
CONCLUSIONS AND POLICY IMPLICATIONS
• Top–down policy process is not God–given for Ethiopia.
Genuine bottom–up process is possible. The government
should make genuine community consultation not a one-off
event but a culture of policy–making, and move away from
high–level “conference style” consultations.
• Potentials and constraints to agricultural transformation are
well known. However, the contradictions and conflicting
objectives are not articulated in Ethiopian policy circles.
The government should focus its attention to resolving
these contradictions.
EEA
CONFERENCE
www.future-agricultures.org 2007
Thank you